Bloomberg
Germany’s Lufthansa is considering stretching out deliveries of Boeing’s new 777X aircraft, concerned about the cost and size of the big jet as the aviation industry shifts to smaller, more nimble planes.
A decision on the new timeline is “urgent†and could be reached by September, according to an internal video presentation by Lufthansa Chief Executive Officer Carsten Spohr. The airline may take additional Airbus A350 planes, which carry fewer passengers than the 400-seat Boeing jet.
“I’m not sure if we’ve really ordered enough A350s and possibly too many 777Xs,†Spohr said at a staff meeting, a replay of which was seen by Bloomberg. “We must now think about either stretching the 777X in a deal with Boeing to let them come in more slowly, or increasing profitability to finance our overdue fleet investments.â€
The move would be a blow to Boeing, which signed up Lufthansa as a launch customer for the 777X. The jet maker has a backlog for the model worth about $125 billion at list prices, with orders concentrated among airlines that have hit market turbulence recently.
Deliveries for the 777X — a new version of Boeing’s existing 777 aircraft that will be the industry’s largest-ever twin-engine jetliner — are due to start in 2020. Lufthansa spokesman Andreas Bartels said reviewing the order book is daily business for any airline and that the company won’t comment on internal discussions.
Demand for big twin-aisle aircraft has weakened since Lufthansa placed an order for the Boeing model in 2013, under Spohr’s predecessor. Cheaper fuel and an industrywide glut of smaller, relatively young widebody planes have upended the economics that had favored larger models for long-range flying.
Any deferrals or cancellations would add to concerns about the future of the 777, Boeing’s second-largest source of profit.
The airline, which has its main hubs in Frankfurt and Munich, is grappling with a shifting aviation market that may have made parts of its orders for 205 aircraft out of step with current trends. Carriers like Norwegian Air Shuttle are ramping up cut-rate trans-Atlantic services using long-range narrow-bodies or fuel-efficient aircraft like Boeing’s twin-aisle 787 Dreamliner.
Based on list prices, Lufthansa’s order book translates into average spending of 3.9 billion euros ($4.4 billion) a year through 2025. That compares with a budget of about 2.5 billion euros in annual capital expenditure. The $408.8 million 777X would eat up almost all of that, but remains necessary to replace older four-engine aircraft, the CEO said.
The German carrier’s aircraft were 11.3 years old on average last year, compared with 5.5 years at Dublin-based discount carrier Ryanair.
The aging fleet has left Lufthansa with the highest fuel expenses of any airline in Europe, as it operates almost 100 four-engine gas guzzlers. That includes the largest global fleet of Airbus A340s, a model that has long been out of production.
While Lufthansa has 20 777Xs on firm order plus another 14 options, according to Boeing’s order book, it has just 25 A350s due for delivery. The Airbus plane, which seats 293 people and costs about $100 million less, is interesting for long-haul routes.
frequented by fewer passengers, reducing the need to bundle traffic at large hubs. These capabilities could make long-haul services from Düsseldorf, Hamburg and Berlin viable for Lufthansa’s Eurowings budget subsidiary, Spohr said.
Lufthansa has also indicated that it may lease a larger proportion of its fleet and buy more used models to curb expenditures. The carrier said last month that it will replace most of the long-haul planes flown by its Belgian arm and opt for used aircraft.
“Generally speaking, there for sure will be good deals in the coming years,†Spohr said in the video. “Airbus and Boeing have sold far too many aircraft to the Gulf.â€